Park Express


Park Express was an Irish Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. She showed promise as a two-year-old in 1985, before developing into a top-class middle-distance performer in the following season. Racing against horses of her own age and sex she won the Lancashire Oaks and Nassau Stakes before recording her biggest success against colts and older horses in the Phoenix Champion Stakes. She retired from racing with a record of five wins and five places from fourteen races. She later became an extremely successful broodmare, producing several good winners. Most importantly, she was the dam of The Derby winner New Approach, a colt foaled at a time when Park Express was completely blind. She died in 2006 at the age of twenty-three.

Background

Park Express was a "big, rangy", dark brown mare bred in Ireland by Peter Clarke. She was sired by Ahonoora, whose other offspring included The Derby winner Dr Devious. Ahonoora was a representative of the Byerley Turk sire line, unlike more than 95% of modern thoroughbreds, who descend directly from the Darley Arabian. Park Express's dam Matcher was bred in Canada by E. P. Taylor and produced several other winners including Myra's Best and the successful hurdler Wing and a Prayer.
The filly was sent to the sales as a foal and sold for 17,000 Irish guineas. In the following year she was sold again for 42,000 guineas, this time to John Warren, acting on behalf of the father and son team of Paddy and Seamus Burns of the Lodge Park Stud. She was sent into training with Jim Bolger at Coolcullen in County Carlow. Park Express usually raced in a sheepskin noseband.

Racing career

1985: two-year-old season

Park Express began her racing career at Leopardstown Racecourse in September 1985, when she won a six furlong maiden race by five lengths. She was then moved up abruptly in class when she was sent to England for the Group One Cheveley Park Stakes over six furlongs at Newmarket Racecourse. She finished fifth of the fourteen runners, three lengths behind the winner Embla. In late October she started odds-on favourite for the Leopardstown Stakes, but was beaten a head by the colt Toca Madera.

1986: three-year-old season

Park Express began her three-year-old season by winning a minor race at Leopardstown, but when moved up in class she finished tenth behind Sonic Lady in the Irish 1000 Guineas. She was then moved up in distance and finished fourth behind Gull Nook in the Ribblesdale Stakes over one and a half miles at Royal Ascot. John Reid took over as Parke Express's rider for the Lancashire Oaks at Haydock Park Racecourse and adopted new tactics, riding her much closer to the lead than at Ascot. She showed much improved form to record her first Group race success, winning by one and a half lengths from Mill on the Floss, who had finished ahead of her in the Ribblesdale. On 2 August Park Express returned to England for the Group Two Nassau Stakes at Goodwood Racecourse where she was opposed by Maysoon, a filly who had been placed in both the 1000 Guineas and the Oaks Stakes. Park Express started third favourite at odds of 7/1 and won by three lengths from Maysoon and Asteroid Field. Later that month in the Group One Yorkshire Oaks she started third choice in the betting behind Colorspin and Gull Nook. She took the lead in the straight and rallied after being overtaken to finish second, three quarters of a length by Untold.
Park Express then contested the third running of Ireland's most valuable weight-for-age race, the Phoenix Champion Stakes at Phoenix Park Racecourse on 7 September. She started 11/2 third favourite in a race which attracted a strong French challenge headed by the Group One winning four-year-olds Triptych and Baillamont. Park Express took the lead two furlongs from the finish and won decisively by two and a half lengths from Double Bed, with Triptych another two and a half lengths back in third. Reid commented: "She really won her race easily. There was never a moment's concern."
Later that month, Park Express started the odds-on favourite for the Blandford Stakes at the Curragh, but was beaten half a length by the four-year-old colt Nemain. In October she started favourite for the Champion Stakes at Newmarket, where she finished third behind Triptych and Celestial Storm. She was then sent to the United States to run in the Breeders' Cup Distaff at Santa Anita Park. She worked promisingly on the dirt course after being prepared for the surface in Ireland by being galloped on sawdust, but was withdrawn after contracting colic shortly before the race and was subsequently retired.

Assessment

In 1985, the independent Timeform organisation gave Park Express a rating of 111, thirteen pounds below the top-rated two-year-old filly Femme Elite. In the official International Classification for two-year-olds, she was given a rating of 72, eight pounds behind the top-rated filly Baiser Vole. In the following year she was given a rating of 123 by both Timeform and the International Classification. She was the highest-rated three-year-old of either sex trained in Ireland and the highest-rated filly of her generation in Europe over ten furlongs.

Stud record

Park Express was retired from racing to become a broodmare at her owner's Lodge Park Stud in County Kilkenny. She proved to be very successful, producing at least eleven foals and being the ancestor of many good winners:
Her later achievements as a broodmare were more remarkable as she began to lose her sight at the age of sixteen. Her last foal, New Approach, wore a bell to enable his mother to find him at the farm where he was raised. Towards the end of her life her companion was one of the farm's bullocks, to which she had become strongly attached. Park Express died in 2006 at the age of twenty-three.

Pedigree